You Can Use Pokémon Go To Raise Money For Charity

The Pokémon Go craze has been mostly fun and games, but now there’s a way for the latest obsession to do some good in the world.

Application Charity Miles launched a challenge on Tuesday asking Pokémon Go players to raise money for nonprofits all while playing the game.

The challenge uses the Charity Miles app, which allows people to raise funds for a nonprofit by tracking the distance they walk, run or bike. The app then donates funds to a nonprofit on the person’s behalf.

By logging into the Charity Miles app and leaving it open in the background of their phone, Pokémon Go players can simultaneously prance around chasing Bulbasaurs and tick away miles ― and dollars ― for charity.

“We got a big surge [of miles] over the weekend, and we couldn’t really understand what was going on,” Charity Miles founder Gene Gurkoff told The Huffington Post. “And then we realized: This must be from people using Pokémon Go. If you’re out there playing, you might as well help make a difference.”

The Charity Miles system is fairly straightforward: Users launch the app, choose a pre-selected charity ― from Habitat for Humanity to World Wildlife Fund ― and then start moving.

The organization puts a cap on the total amount they give each year, equaling 50 percent of their revenue, which they get largely from corporate sponsors like Johnson & Johnson and Kenneth Cole, according to their Terms of Service. They then disburse the funds to their charity partners, proportionate to the amount of miles users walked or biked on the nonprofits’ behalf.

Over the past four years, the organization has given around $2 million to charity, according to the founder, including more than $500,000 last year alone.

To start raising money for charity all while you catch ‘em all, click here.

CLARIFICATION: This post was updated to clarify Charity Miles’ recent changes to how funds are disbursed, differing from the Terms of Service on their website. The story also originally stated Charity Miles was a nonprofit, but it is an application that partners with nonprofits.

The game spawned <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/pok%C3%A9mon-go-at-the-holocaust-museum_us_57854a05e4b03fc3ee4e4f94?8q1c1a1jr33ex9a4i">three Pok&eacute;mon at the Holocaust Museum</a> in Washington, D.C., to the dismay of ... almost everyone.&nbsp;<br><br>&ldquo;Playing the game is not appropriate in the museum, which is a memorial to the victims of Nazism,&rdquo;&nbsp;<a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-switch/wp/2016/07/12/holocaust-museum-to-visitors-please-stop-catching-pokemon-here/" target="_blank">museum spokesman Andrew Hollinger told The Washington Post</a>&nbsp;in July 2016. &ldquo;We are trying to find out if we can get the museum excluded from the game.&rdquo;